Kahlbaum Abstract Hallucinations

Table of contents:

Introduction

Theoretical basis of hallucinosis

Methods for studying hallucinosis in practice

Psychological aspects of hallucinosis

Types of hallucinations in patients

On the history of hallucinonic thinking

Some aspects of the sociological influence of hallucination on society

Conclusion



Kahlbaum abstract hallucinating is often associated with a patient who has experienced an unusual number of auditory and visual hallucinations, including those produced at the highest level of emotion.

Basel's first psychoanalyst and professor of psychiatry was K.L. Kahlbaum. He studied pathological mental states such as mania, panic attack, schizophrenia, psychosis and other mental disorders. His work on hallucinations and pseudohallucinations was revolutionary and important for the development of modern psychiatry and psychology. He developed the concepts of transference and conceptualization, and was also the first to describe a form of endogenous depression, often called endogenous epilepsy.

In 1854, Karl L. Kallbau presented his observations and realized that abstract, visual images (now known as